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If happiness were
simply a choice, who wouldn’t choose it?
Studies have confirmed happy people live longer, are healthier and more
successful than their unhappy counterparts.
Happiness is an emotion, a state of being of mind. It does take more than just deciding to be
happy. It takes deciding to focus on
those things in our environment that we can be grateful for and that we can use
and enjoy. So, why would anybody choose
to be miserable? Unhappiness is
often rewarded. Being unhappy, others
are always trying to cheer us up. The
squeaky wheel gets the grease. Children
learn at an early age that when they cry their parents will buy them things. Choosing happiness is a more mature and adult
way of interacting with life and those around us. Our prime instinct
is self preservation which means we automatically are focusing on the danger or
potential danger in our environment … what might be wrong or bad. To be happy, we have to continually choose to
go beyond looking for danger, for what is wrong and to look for what is right, what
is good, what is useful, etc. By practicing daily and in non-threatening situations the searching for the good, the positive, the safe or enjoyable, we can improve our ability to overcome our ingrained and primitive habit of only looking for danger. By constantly reminding ourselves to ask “What is good about this?” we can become happier, healthier and more successful at life. |
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